Another LA school suspected of cheating

LOS ANGELES 
A second Los Angeles school is suspected of cheating on California standardized tests.

The Los Angeles Times (
http://lat.ms/nmUjvn
) says Koreatown's Virgil Middle School could lose a $3.5 million state grant because of cheating allegations against a teacher who is now retired.

Documents submitted to the California Department of Education allege the Algebra teacher scanned the Academic Performance Index test into her computer and prepared a review sheet for students based on actual test questions.

There are concerns the school might lose the state grant given for meeting improvement targets on API scores.

Virgil is the second Los Angeles Unified School District campus hit with a cheating allegations.

Three teachers at Short Avenue Elementary in the Del Rey area are suspected of coaching students, changing answers on tests or both.